Gold: New Bull Or Same Old Bear?

There are two schools of thought right now, and both sides are firmly convinced they are correct.

The bullish case: Gold started a new cyclical bull market in late 2015.

The bearish case: The bounce out of the 2015 bottom was just a counter trend bear market rally, and at best gold is stuck in a long sideways channel similar to the 1980-2001 period.

While I have to admit there is a lot of compelling evidence to support the bearish scenario I’m not convinced that is correct.

I’ve noted before that gold tends to move in a distinct ABCD pattern. The A-wave is an aggressive rally out of a major corrective bottom. The B-wave is some form of correction that clears the bullish sentiment produced during the explosive A-wave advance. (B-waves can be rather complex and exhausting). The C-wave is where the gains are made. Then finally the D-wave decline as the C-wave tops and a major correction begins. I’ve shown an example in the next chart of this 4-wave pattern.

As we have moved through this secular bull market these 4 wave patterns have gotten bigger and taken more time. You can see in the chart above the C-wave advance from October of 2006 to the top in March of 2009 spanned almost 18 months and gained 89%.

The next C-wave advance that began in April of 2009 ran for 29 months and gained 123%.

Many traders are convinced that gold is now stuck in a long sideways bear market. I on the other hand tend to think we are stuck in a very complex and frustrating B-wave decline.

The Baby bull rally certainly fit the parameters of an A-wave advance:

Retraced a significant portion of the previous D-wave decline but didn’t move above the previous C-wave top (in this case back to the 38% Fib).

Once the A-wave has topped there is a B-wave decline that washes away the optimism that was generated during the powerful A-wave. This can unfold as either a deep correction that retests the D-wave bottom (but doesn’t drop below it), or it can be a complex frustrating sideways correction that eventually just wears traders out as they were expecting the A-wave to resume quickly.

I’m going to suggest gold has been in the grip of a complex and frustrating B-wave decline ever since the A-wave topped in 2016.

Considering the current daily cycle in gold is left translated it’s not out of the question that we could get one more quick push down over the next couple of weeks to test and marginally break the post election low at 1140 before the B-wave is complete and the next C-wave begins.

That being said I’m starting to wonder if Palladium, and possibly now silver are already developing shortages and they may diverge from gold if it makes a lower low. The rally on Friday in silver was pretty convincing and it has broken its intermediate trend line.

If silver disconnects from gold and fails to follow it lower that would be a strong signal the B-wave is coming to an end. Next week could confirm this theory if gold continues down but silver ignores it and moves higher.

Gary Savage is a 57-year-old retired entrepreneur living in Las Vegas. He has been investing in stocks and commodities for 15+ years. He is a self-made multi-millionaire and attributes his financial success to savvy investments made in owning/selling several businesses, real estate, and, more recently, the stock market. He is also an Olympic weightlifting champion, and world record holder. Gary’s stock market investment philosophy and success owes to an unusually disciplined and keen understanding of market cycles combined with cutting edge sentiment data which allows him to anticipate and articulate how larger trends are likely to unfold. His analysis is almost always in strong contrast to what the public is thinking – and, provocatively, several steps ahead of the crowd. Gary’s renown as a recognized trading/investment expert in the areas of precious metals, stock market, oil and currency markets is demonstrated by his numerous internationally published articles in these market areas. Gary publishes the Smart Money Tracker, a market newsletter available online by subscription only, and also the SMT free blog.